Did i spell vareing right?
![Confused :?](./images/smilies/wtf.gif)
Obviously, one must break some rules to make something That "can not exist", exist. However, the more rules you break, the harder it is to accept.Apokryltaros wrote:On the one hand, how exactly is a person changing into a wolf-like creature realistic?
On the other hand, if the mass stays exactly the same, how do you explain the brain not being damaged from the head/cranium changing shape?
I mean, whenever I hear about people saying a werewolf in their hybrid form having the exact same mass as their human form, I imagine a dog-headed chimpanzee.
What I'm trying to say is to stop and think about what you're advocating for...
The way I see it, the people who advocate for werewolves obeying the law of conservation of mass fall into two camps.
One camp being the people who picture werewolves as being very hairy people who wear wolf's heads...
And how would a person in a wolf-head mask be awe-inspiring, let alone threatening?
And the other camp being those who envision werewolves as being spindly predators (one person's creation looked all for the world like a wolf-baboon hybrid). I just don't like the idea of mammalian predators being spindly.
And I can't wrap my head around the possibility that either idea can produce an aesthetically pleasing werewolf.
Clearly, you are very insistant on the idea that people get BIGGER when they transform into a Werewolf. The large, strong and "anti-Anorexic" as possible body type is the defining image of a werewolf in your mind, and anything that varys too far from that vision is blasphemy of the name "WereWolf".Apokryltaros wrote:Then why not have them all look like the bastard children of Lon Chaney Jr?
That way, we maintain the beloved, holy law of conservation of mass.
I have not forgotten the lengthening of the foot. I remembered that a werewolf also bends its knees, negating the extra standing height.Vuldari wrote:The change of the foot goes hand in hand with a shift in standing posture as well. With Digitgrade feet, a werewolf can not stand with it's legs straight like a human can without falling over backwards, so I think it would gain very little in standing height from that, if any at all.Apokryltaros wrote:...B) What about the lengthing of the werewolf's feet as he shifts from human to wolfman form?
Can you imagine Shaq, he wouldnt have to lift his arm that much to make a dunkFenrir wrote:Well if you were six feet tall you would be eight feet tall so the if you a basketball player to begin with you would be freakishly tall.
yeah I was about to change the 1ft 1/2 thing down to just a 1ft or 2Lupin wrote:Yeah, the werwolf should be a foot or two taller than the human we start out with.